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#1
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I have an Eton E5 which I connect to my laptop via the Line Out on the
Eton to the Line In on the laptop. This works great for recording shortwave broadcasts, but if the laptop is plugged in, it generates some interference on the radio (only when they are connected via lineout / in). If I unplug the laptop, there is no interference. Does anyone know if there is anything I can do to get rid of the inteference? I want to set up my machine to record programs overnight, so I can't leave the laptop unplugged. mike http://mesh.typepad.com |
#2
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"Mike Chambers" wrote in message
news ![]() I have an Eton E5 which I connect to my laptop via the Line Out on the Eton to the Line In on the laptop. This works great for recording shortwave broadcasts, but if the laptop is plugged in, it generates some interference on the radio (only when they are connected via lineout / in). If I unplug the laptop, there is no interference. Does anyone know if there is anything I can do to get rid of the inteference? I want to set up my machine to record programs overnight, so I can't leave the laptop unplugged. mike http://mesh.typepad.com How about a real long line in cable? I got lots less noise when recording into my laptop when I could get the radio farther away. |
#3
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Mike Chambers wrote:
I have an Eton E5 which I connect to my laptop via the Line Out on the Eton to the Line In on the laptop. This works great for recording shortwave broadcasts, but if the laptop is plugged in, it generates some interference on the radio (only when they are connected via lineout / in). If I unplug the laptop, there is no interference. Does anyone know if there is anything I can do to get rid of the inteference? I want to set up my machine to record programs overnight, so I can't leave the laptop unplugged. mike http://mesh.typepad.com You have a ground loop. Get an isolation transformer, say Radio Shack 270-054A about $15, and insert it in the connecting audio cable. -- Ron Hardin On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. |
#4
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Thanks. That is exactly what I was looking for.
mike On Thu, 04 Jan 2007 02:00:15 GMT, Ron Hardin wrote: You have a ground loop. Get an isolation transformer, say Radio Shack 270-054A about $15, and insert it in the connecting audio cable. |
#5
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![]() Hello, you can also get some noise-reduction ferrite core, such as this : http://www.shinemicro.com/images/ferritethumb.jpg Perhaps you have some already clamped on some device's wire (digital camera, AC/DC tranformer, modem, etc...). If you can un-clamp one a clamp it on your laptop power wire OR audio line wire, just check if it helps... I did that on my AC/DC adapter of my SW radio, and it helps reducing (a little) incomming RFI. Charly |
#6
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Unfortunately that didn't solve the problem.
Any other ideas? I want to be able to automate recording some frequencies over night, but I cant right now, as I have to keep the laptop plugged in, which is causing significant static / interference. mike On Thu, 04 Jan 2007 02:00:15 GMT, Ron Hardin wrote: You have a ground loop. Get an isolation transformer, say Radio Shack 270-054A about $15, and insert it in the connecting audio cable. |
#7
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Thanks. That didnt seem to help any.
mike On Thu, 04 Jan 2007 10:47:45 +0100, Charly wrote: Hello, you can also get some noise-reduction ferrite core, such as this : http://www.shinemicro.com/images/ferritethumb.jpg Perhaps you have some already clamped on some device's wire (digital camera, AC/DC tranformer, modem, etc...). If you can un-clamp one a clamp it on your laptop power wire OR audio line wire, just check if it helps... I did that on my AC/DC adapter of my SW radio, and it helps reducing (a little) incomming RFI. Charly |
#8
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Talk to some people at a local radio station,or tv station.They might
have some good tips.I know some radio and tv stations record programs to computer files/data. cuhulin |
#9
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![]() Mike Chambers wrote: Unfortunately that didn't solve the problem. The transformer should have fixed the problem. The noise is most likely coming from the laptop switched-mode power supply. Have you tested it while running on batteries alone? I have several radios connected to computers, and for this I use the Buxcomm Rascal GLX (www.buxcomm.com) and this works for both of my pc's and my laptop. The Rascal is also available as a kit for transceivers and you can build just the receive side if you wish. That said, the transformer alone should be enough, and there is the possibility that you did not assemble the cable shielding correctly or add sufficient bypassing. My computers receive audio, decode it and post it to my webpage. This system does work, do not despair. Brad www.vk2qq.com |
#10
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Mike Chambers wrote:
... Mike: Here is an interesting link: http://www.waypoint.com/users/~disco...esentation.htm One circuit I seen on this page makes use of an opto-isolator. Seems to me that with a led and photo-transistor one could kludge together a unit which would seem to perform miracles!!! Warmest regards, JS |
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